114 Faces That Are Tired - mustn't look it this season! The really smart faces of the mo- ment wear a gay and gallant look . . . The look that follows a brief beauty rite with the Y outhifying Herbal Masque by Helena Rubinstein. It took the combined skill of Helena Rubinstein plus the es- sences of twenty-three exotic herbs to produce this quick beauty pick-up. It will take you but a moment to prove what a little miracle it works on your beautyl Feel it lllift" those tired. drawn contours of face and throat. Iron out lines and wrinkles. Light a young glow in your skin. Give you that ready-for-anything air . . . Make a weekly habit of Y outhify- ing Herbal Masque. Count on it for beauty on short notice! 2.00. 5.00- 10 and 25 treatments. Come to the Salon and hear more about this blessing to the modern face . . . Come for an individual study of your skin-for the new- est make-up news from Paris. And do have a Salon treatment. Even one will make you realize you've been missing something vital to your charm! . . . Consultation is without charge. "Sit helena rubinstëiii 8 East 57th Street, New York LONDON PLaza 3-7570 PARIS youth to account for his defeatism, his willingness to shatter the marvellous strength he had so carefully built up. The events of the narrative, tragic as they are, are insufficient to motivate his downfall. It is the failure to reach far, far back in to his characters' lives that helps to prevent this novel from being the first-rate work of fic- tion we have been expecting from F. Scott Fitzgerald. Perhaps, if he were less torn by a half-unwilling love for the bright world his creatures in- habit, he might perceive in them a cer- tain basic weakness of will-and, more particularly, of intelligence. For no intelligence has any chance at health- ful exercise when it is a function of a code, whether it be the collegiate code of "smoothness" or the Riviera- American code of would-be Renais- sance aristocracy. I t is an open secret that Mr. F itz- gerald's gifts are bewilderingly varied. He has wit, grace, astonishing nar- rative skill. He is a careful and-in his noncommercial moments-a con- scientious writer. His prose has polish and yet also bone and 'muscle. But he has not yet achieved an organized at- titude toward his material. He is cer- tainly not objective; he is both con- temptuous of and in love with his char- acters. If his understanding of them should harden, mature, and if finally he should outgrow them, or at least apply his ready, quick intelligence to the .complex relations between his high- ly specialized world and the rest of humanity (as Proust did) , then we n1ight see in him a completely first- rate American novelist. A SMALL but not trifling post- script: The atmosphere generated by the characters is one of such infal- lible worldly wisdom that the accidental, tiny errors cropping up here and there are doubly unsettling. Not to mention such blunders in French as saland for salaud, we find Anthiel for Antheil, Suppe for (von) Suppé, Marie Briz- zard for Marie Brizard, Cherry Rochet for Cherry Roeher, F ernet Blanco for Fernet-Branca, mousseaux for mous- seux, Krapaelin for Kraepelin, Wasser- man for Wassermann ( syphilis) , sehizzoid for schizoid, schizophrêne for schizophrene, Privat docent for Privat-dozent, Interlacken for Inter- laken, etc. I t would be picayune in- deed to list these proofreader's over- sights were it not that the inhabitants of Mr Fitzgerald's world, who pride themselves on their impeccability, should never arouse in the reader's API\IL 14-, 193+ from our Moderate Prj,ce Dept. Dinner Gown of "dusty rose" crepe, with metal clips and buckle. $35 " , ( . > . 4 .West 57th Street ''\ '":." , "-:;:" .:-': ::.<:'... :.....:. . :. s . . , " A permanent wave as conceived and presented by Bernord az Guro is a creation of rare beauty. BfRnORD aa GURO 439 mßDiSOn VfnU{ WiCKfRSÐÁm 2-1692 . . _. ;,.;:;,J:i%.L , . >--> -- .... .....h'n.,:, ...:,=,::,., _, = ','n N ' .. W-iN &f -q '@;r ' m .' . -'. ".":.. .:.. . I "" RI ' "":, ", , , , ', \ :, .. .. .. ' , " , ' . ...... .-. :} ; ,..,3,..i'l f t) '6 I .{ << ::::- :,::-; :: : : , ( , : , ; , : " : : , : , : : , , , , : :, ; : : , , : , ; , : ::" ' , :, ' , '; , -t : : : : ' ", <:v 8ROTHEItST',J ; ; : " : t1